eMusic Review 0
Having written songs and recorded with musicians in styles ranging from reggae to salsa to gospel, it was hardly surprising that Paul Simon would fall under the sway of South African mbaqanga, or township jive. The surprise came in his making a whole album of it — and doing so while the nation's oppressive apartheid system was being vigorously protested by his fellow musicians, most visibly on 1985's Artists United Against Apartheid album, Sun City. So of course 1986's Graceland was controversial — Simon practically invited it, not least by dueting with Linda Ronstadt, whose appearance at the S.A. resort Sun City violated the U.N.'s cultural boycott of the nation — as did Simon, for recording parts of the album in Johannesburg, with local musicians.
But decades down the line, Simon's album sounds as remarkable as ever. Aside from the final two tracks, collaborations with zydeco band Good Rockin' Dopsie and L.A.'s Los Lobos that draw a line between the South African groove with North American styles a little too eagerly, Graceland is the sharpest music Simon had made since his debut 14 years before. "I Know What I Know" has the keenest wit — the contrast between Simon's bemused lyric… read more »